The Australian Child Maltreatment Study (ACMS), a national survey of the prevalence of child maltreatment and its correlates: methodology

Author:

Haslam Divna M12ORCID,Lawrence David M3ORCID,Mathews Ben14ORCID,Higgins Daryl J5ORCID,Hunt Anna3,Scott James G67ORCID,Dunne Michael P18,Erskine Holly E910,Thomas Hannah J710ORCID,Finkelhor David11,Pacella Rosana12ORCID,Meinck Franziska1314,Malacova Eva7

Affiliation:

1. Queensland University of Technology Brisbane QLD

2. Parenting and Family Support Centre, the University of Queensland Brisbane QLD

3. Curtin University Perth WA

4. Bloomberg School of Public Health Johns Hopkins University Baltimore MD United States of America

5. Institute of Child Protection Studies Australian Catholic University Melbourne VIC

6. Child Health Research Centre, the University of Queensland Brisbane QLD

7. QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute Brisbane QLD

8. Institute for Community Health Research Hue University Hue City Vietnam

9. The University of Queensland Brisbane QLD

10. Queensland Centre for Mental Health Research Brisbane QLD

11. Crimes against Children Research Center University of New Hampshire Durham NH United States of America

12. Institute for Lifecourse Development University of Greenwich London United Kingdom

13. University of Edinburgh Edinburgh United Kingdom

14. University of the Witwatersrand Johannesburg Johannesburg South Africa

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesTo describe the aims, design, methodology, and respondent sample representativeness of the Australian Child Maltreatment Study (ACMS).Design, settingCross‐sectional, retrospective survey; computer‐assisted mobile telephone interviewing using random digit dialling (computer‐generated), Australia, 9 April – 11 October 2021.ParticipantsPeople aged 16 years or more. The target sample size was 8500 respondents: 3500 people aged 16–24 years and 1000 respondents each from five further age groups (25–34, 35–44, 45–54, 55–64, 65 years or more).Main outcome measuresPrimary outcomes: Emotional abuse, neglect, physical abuse, sexual abuse, exposure to domestic violence during childhood, assessed with the Juvenile Victimization Questionnaire‐R2 Adapted Version (Australian Child Maltreatment Study). Secondary outcomes: selected mental disorder diagnoses (Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview, MINI), selected physical health conditions, health risk behaviours, health service use.ResultsThe demographic characteristics of the ACMS sample were similar to those of the Australian population in 2016 with respect to gender, Indigenous status, region and remoteness category of residence, and marital status, but larger proportions of participants were born in Australia, lived in areas of higher socio‐economic status, had tertiary qualifications, and had income greater than $1250 per week. Population weights were derived to adjust for these differences. Associations between the number of calls required to recruit participants and maltreatment rates and health outcomes were not statistically significant.ConclusionsThe ACMS provides the first reliable estimates of the prevalence of each type of child maltreatment in Australia. These estimates, and those of associated mental health and health risk behaviours reported in this supplement can inform policy and practice initiatives for reducing the prevalence of child maltreatment and its consequences. Our benchmark study also provides baseline data for repeated waves of the ACMS that will assess the effectiveness of these initiatives.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council

Australian Institute of Criminology

European Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

Reference38 articles.

1. Immediate impact of child maltreatment on mental, developmental, and physical health trajectories

2. A Systematic Review of Reviews of the Outcome of Noninstitutional Child Maltreatment

3. Child maltreatment: An intergenerational cascades model of risk processes potentiating child psychopathology

4. Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. Final report recommendations. 15 Dec 2017.https://www.childabuseroyalcommission.gov.au/sites/default/files/final_report_‐_recommendations.pdf(viewed June 2022).

5. Australian Government (Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet). National strategy to prevent and respond to child sexual abuse 2021–2030. 2021.https://www.childsafety.gov.au/resources/national‐strategy‐prevent‐and‐respond‐child‐sexual‐abuse‐2021‐2030(viewed Feb 2023).

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